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Friday, June 29, 2012

So the title of this post is a little strange. Getting Stuck? Who is getting stuck? What's stuck? Why are they stuck?

Let me explain. I've been on this journey called publication for over seven years. In that time, I've experienced highs, lows and more than a couple of rejection letters. In that time, I've always had at least one story brewing in my head. Now don't get me wrong. It's nice to have the characters chattering. I love trying to get their stories down on paper, or better yet, on the computer.

Here's the stuck point (yes, I meant stuck). I'm a sucker for a challenge. I'm also a sucker for deadlines. Don't ask me why, but the challenge of making it in before a deadline, especially when I have characters who want to talk to me, is great fun.

But I've got at least two challenges ahead of me. One is in progress, but the other was issued yesterday. The problem is I have other stuff to finish first (those pesky deadlines I love so much).

Now I can hear you saying, gee, what a problem to have. Too much to do. While I love the challenge of having so much to do, I'm in the midst of one of those crisis moments. "Oh my golly, I'll never get it all done...there aren't enough hours in the day!!!"

Have you ever been in one of those situations. You know you can handle the stress and can accomplish the challenge, but that moment of panic has set in?

If you have, I'd love to know. I'd love some suggestions on getting past the crisis moment (other than watching the A-Team movie for the umpteenth time). Let me know.

Want to know more about Wendi Zwaduk? Here you go:

I always dreamt of writing the stories in my head. Tall, dark, and handsome heroes are my favorites, as long as he has an independent woman keeping him in line. I earned a BA in education at Kent State University and currently hold a Masters in Education with Nova Southeastern University.

I love NASCAR, romance, books in general, Ohio farmland, dirt racing, and my menagerie of animals. I also write under the pen name of Megan Slayer. I’m published with Total-E-Bound, Changeling Press, Liquid Silver Books, Turquoise Morning Press and The Wild Rose Press. Come join me for this fantastic journey!

If you like my work, tell your friends and email me. I love hearing from readers!

Thursday, June 28, 2012

It's an exciting time for me right now, because as of July 1, 2012, I will have been published for one year. My debut novella, Celestial Seduction released last year as part of Decadent Publishing's 1Night Stand line. It was the first scifi romance in the line, and the beginning of a dream come true.

It was fellow Paranormal Romantics author, Rebecca Royce who encouraged me to write a story for this line. Her story, One Night With A Wolf had been contracted, and she thought it would be a good fit for me. And the journey began.

So, I thought I'd share with you an excerpt from Celestial Seduction:

“Remember how I said I needed an open-minded partner?”She nodded, her eyes catching a quick glance from his before returning to her stomach. Just a couple more minutes and he’d be finished.

He prepared to hold her down should she freak out when he told her he came from space. “I’m not exactly like you and most of the people on Earth. I’m….different.”

“Like a demon or a guardian angel?”

He laughed. It sounded forced, but he needed to stay focused on healing Carrie rather than mating with her. “No, you’re thinking paranormal. Try science fiction.”

She began to squirm under him, but he didn’t need to restrain her. “A….clone? Artificial intelligence?”

He finished healing her and lay down beside her. His thumb ran across her lips, wanting to taste them again, but knowing he probably wouldn’t. “Try alien.”

Her mouth curved into a smile. “Alien. I don’t think so. You’re missing the big head and eyes, the green skin, the willowy limbs.”

He touched his fingertips to the side of her head. “Like this?” He flashed an image of the alien Earthlings always expected to arrive from space.“

Yeah, but how’d you do that?” Fear shone in her eyes.

Leaving the bed, he sat on one of the loveseats. The night was over. In a second, she’d dress as quickly as possible and rush out of the room. “I told you, I’m an alien from outer space.” Perhaps he shouldn’t have told her. He would spend the rest of the night alone.

Jessica E. Subject is the author of science fiction romance, mostly alien romances, ranging from sweet to super hot. Sometimes she dabbles in paranormal and contemporary as well, bringing to life a wide variety of characters. In her stories, you could not only meet a sexy alien or two, but also clones and androids. You may be transported to a dystopian world where rebels are fighting to live and love, or to another planet for a romantic rendezvous.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Gary Oldman has this whole Industrialist/Kaiser/Lenin thing going on. Seriously the bunnies just bounce off him.

The Tor link has more images and a brief filming of the photo shoot and there's a youtube of the catwalk show. Tim Roth appears at about 1 minute in, absolutely grinning fit to burst. Gary Oldman, of course is broody and hot.

There is something about the power of steampunk clothing, especially tailored to this quality, that makes me love it. It speaks of the might of an age, of influence and wealth and also makes you consider the inverse, of the poverty on which that wealth was built. These could be the men at the top of the Victorian class pyramid. And everything about them makes you very aware of it.

I live on an ancient boundary line, once marked by a Neolithic burial tomb. The tomb’s now a standing stone circle–thank the Georgians for that one–and stirs my mind with thoughts of history and ancient myths.

I mix the essence of the past into fantasy, along with the essential mix of magic and sex. I also write science fiction romance, pushing out into the far future with effortlessly sexy men and the women who can’t resist them.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

I'll be the first to admit that angels, God and heaven aren't usually what you'll see in erotic romances. But I've never been good at paying attention to rules, so when I sat down to write, I jumped right into the middle of all those no-nos.

There is an unwritten rule that angels have to be kinda bad boys and demons have to really be the misunderstood good guys when it comes to angel stories. There should be a distinct divide between the angel and any real hints of heaven and hell, and if heaven or hell is mentioned, it's not like we humans think it is.

Yeah, I missed those rules too.

Here's the thing, I love the stark and unmistakable dynamic of good against evil. There is no mistaking what is bad and what is good in my stories. The teams and field of play are clearly defined. It's everything else that gets confusing.

Enter the fallible character, the angel forced to test the boundaries, throw away the rulebook and fight for what he knows in his heart is right, even when everyone around him is telling him he's wrong.

To me, this is when things really get interesting. Just because the heroes are angels doesn't mean they are perfect. Their uncertainty, the struggle to find their way out of a confusing situation and possible repercussions that are far worse than just dying bring the tension up and make my brain go into overdrive.

But why angels and demons?

It probably has a lot to do with a very religious upbringing. I learned to read by following congregational songs in the hymnal, and I'm pretty sure I was reciting Bible verses before I knew my alphabet. But as I grew up, I also learned to question what I was told was right and wrong. Once I was old enough to reason things out, I was encouraged to think for myself instead of blindly following what someone else told me was right.

I value that lesson more than any other. It's one thing to know the legalities of right and wrong, another entirely to understand the morality that makes something truly good or evil.

In the end, that is the lesson I most wanted my angels and demons to learn. Something isn't right or because someone else says it is, or because you can get away with it. It's right because it at its core pure and generous, with no greater purpose than to make the world a better place for someone else.

Are you an angel fan? I'd love to hear what you like about them.

The third book in my Heavenly Lovers series is coming soon from Ellora's Cave. Watch for it!

Monday, June 25, 2012

When I was asked if I wanted to write one of the Gatekeeper novels (Lyrical Press), I jumped at it.
"I can do this!" I beamed. "No problem!"
I had the contract and the cover before I ever wrote a single word.
I sat down, an idea in my head, and wrote--and then I scrapped ALL of it. 8,000 words.
No biggie. It happens.
I started over. Tweaked the idea and rewrote the beginning--only it still didn't work.
More scrapping.
24,000 words this time.
I was tearing my hair out.
Here I was, 32,000 words written, and I had...nothing. Zip, nada, zilch, squat.The monsters weren't playing ball. At least not with me.
It began to get scary.
I'd signed a contract. I had a cover. I had a release date (Feb 2013). We had a webpage already.
What I didn't have...was a story.What if... I couldn't do it?
That's not the kind of "What if..." I want to be asking myself.
Worse, the edits for Watch Me had to be done as well.

Deadlines create pressure, we all know that. It gets so much worse when you sit there and draw a total blank. It's a scary situation. I hate letting people down, and the last ones I want to let down are my fellow Gatekeeper authors, and the publisher. We all cope differently with the stress, and some deal with it better than others. I can do deadlines and I don't really mind the stress, but I panic when I stare at a blank page and know I have to come up with something worth reading.
And that's the kicker.
It has to be worth reading.
I can write day in day out, but that doesn't mean it's publishable, or I'd want anyone to read it. I don't like half-assed attempts at a good story. I want only my best out there, so I had to come up with something I could stand behind 100%.
That's why those 32k were thrown out. They simply weren't "It".
I can rescue most of it, but it'll take a major rewrite and--see above--I don't rewrite very well. It never works for me. So the original story may never see the light of day.
I beat myself up when I can't come up with something good, and that makes things worse. My muse goes into a major sulk and takes a vacation. Nothing helps. It's not writers block, it's a lack of enthusiasm for the story I'm writing. When that hits me, I ditch the project and start over.
Which is exactly what I did with Caedir. I threw out not just the writing I'd already done, but the entire storyline as well. Plot, characters, locations -- everything. Not even his looks stayed the same, and I killed off the human heroine while I was at it. She didn't retain her name, either.
I completely divorced myself from the previous attempt.

Don't ever be afraid to admit to yourself that what you've written isn't what you want anyone to see. We grow with the decisions we make, but we grow a lot more from the really hard ones, than from tiptoeing around the truth.
If it sucks, it sucks.
It really is that simple. If you think it sucks--why would you struggle to finish it? Your heart isn't in it, and it'll only get worse. Get some distance first, and if--when you come back--it still sucks...ditch it, take a deep breath, and start over.

I have the story now. I'm about 5-10k from the end, but I won't be releasing that breath I've been holding since March until I put the last word on paper.

Yep, it's Smurf Central 'round here.

You can find out for yourself if I came up trumps when Caedir is released in February 2013.

Silke grew up in Germany and is used to things going bump in the night -- and it wasn't always the acrophobic cat, or someone hitting their head on a low beam on the ceiling.
She writes paranormal romance, usually at night, and blames Anne Stuart to this day for all her ambitions and strange stories, after reading one of her books.
These days the only thing going bump at "oh-dark-thirty" is her -- usually when she smacks into the sofa while creeping to the kitchen for another cup of coffee.
Silke likes to hear from her readers. Feel free to contact her via her blog at http://www.evilauthor.com, follow her on Twitter, or become a friend on Facebook.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Good afternoon, readers! It's been an interesting month for me. I took my first domestic train ride, and LOVED it!

I'm still out in the middle of nowhere at my Mom's home. While the visit has been lovely, I'm ready to get back home to the chaos of my life. :D

*gestures to a table of pastries and beverages*

Have your pick of treats for today's post. I'd like to talk about dark hungers in our paranormal heroes and heroines.

What is it about the inner animal/monster of paranormal romance characters that gets the heart pounding? Is it the edge of danger? The rush of adventure? Or is it our wish to tame that creature? To draw out the very best and noble qualities of that individual?

Before you answer those questions, how about some eye candy? Alcide from the HBO series True Blood. Wouldn't you just love to help him tame the beast? Yum.

I'm fiddling with a story idea that involves a midnight train racing across Texas. A hidden werewolf. A woman in defiance of her uncle's agenda. And a dark purpose that neither character expects. Sounds fun. :D

And here's some trivia for you. What paranormal creatures did Paul Wesley play before his role as Stefan Salvatore on Vampire Diaries? Bonus points if you can name the series/movies. :D

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Just for fun, I decided to cast the main characters of my urban fantasy trilogy, The Order. The first book, Stalking Shade was one of my very first books written and naturally I hold the characters dear to my heart.

The Order trilogy, in a nutshell, involves murder, mystery, and a mysterious organization. With a few vampires thrown in. And here's what I chose as my cast:

Summer Glau as Lori: Codename Shade, prickly goth and member of The Order.

Friday, June 22, 2012

My next novel just might be written on my phone. I always have it on me and it always has an Internet hotspot--more than my laptop can boast out here in the wilds of North Dakota. 60,000 words with thumbs only? Bring it!
Necessity is the mother of invention. Maybe I'll get bit by a mutant bug (there are plenty out here) and develop extra thumbs! That would be rocking convenient!
Alas, until that day I shall soldier on and be a better planner, especially for blogs so I don't have to attempt them on my phone!
All the best,
Stephanie Beck
Www.stephaniebeck.net

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Hallo Again! It's the 21st of the month, so that means
Robert's back in the house. For those of you who missed last month, I wrote
about the Steam Punk World's Fair, since I'd just come back from that event.
Well, it turns out this month I've just finished an event on the 20th as well.
An event from an entirely different aspect of my life. Yes, my secret identity
is revealed! I teach life sciences at Woodrow Wilson High School, and today was
graduation day!

This was the first time I've gone to graduation. I teach all
four grades at the school so I've had students graduate before, but it's
usually been one or two, and most of them in the past have chosen not to walk
for one reason or another. This class, on the other hand...

This goes out to the young woman who hadn't been coming to
class, and hiding in the back when she did. One day she was struggling with her
notebook, writing with her off hand. It turned out she'd hit a wall because she
didn't want to get suspended, and someone made her so mad she had to hit
something. Her hand was bloody and crooked. I sent her to the nurse, and when
she returned the next day, hand in a cast, I moved her next to a student who
was there every day, took good notes, but was having occasional problems
'getting it'. He took her notes, she explained the knotty bits to him.

This goes out to the young woman who said, "I can't do
this! I'm not learning anything!" When I asked her "What's Deoxyribonucleic
Acid?" Her immediate response? "Oh, that's DNA, genetic material, how
you get stuff from your parents."

This goes out to the young man who didn't pass his HSPAs
(state graduation tests) on the first try, or the second, or the third. He's
old enough he could have signed himself out, but he refused to quit. He. Kept.
Coming. Back. Every Day. Hammering away at it until he passed it.

This goes out to the young lady too shy to talk in public,
even when talking would pay her college bills and not talking nearly got her
suspended. What she can't say in words, she says in images to make angels weep. It also goes out to the young man who makes her smile... and
stand up straight and tall and even talk in public now and then.

This goes out to the young man who, when I lost the flash
drive with all my grades on, brought me a perfectly functional one he'd found lying on the street. It wasn't mine, and I
told him that, but he gave it to me anyway, because I needed one to keep my
grades on.

This goes out to the young woman who still hates me for
pushing her. She said she was going to quit school and have kids. She
managed to keep up with some of my best, most hardworking students, and did it
all in a language she wasn't proficient in.

This goes out to the young man who kept his campaign for
office clean, even when some students vandalized his posters with slurs about
his sexual orientation. It does get better.

This goes out to the young man who came to me, confused at
receiving an 'F' for the first marking period. I told him he'd missed too many
days to pass for the year, but I would let him make them up during his lunch. I
saw him every lunch from then until the end of the year. I still remember what
he said to me in May. "You're like a nightmare. You never go away, you're
always here!"

To the young lady who can't stop laughing. Ever. No matter
how much she ought to.

To the young man who didn't have enough English to write the
answers to the questions, but by god he could draw them.

To the young man who made sure my students had pizza at the
end of the year.

To the young lady who took a year off to have her
daughter... but came back and finished.

Speaking of coming back, remember the young woman with the
hand and the young man with the notes? They went missing on the last day of
school 2010, and when I hunted them down they were in one of the labs with a small
group of students, watching YouTube videos. When I asked them why they weren't
watching the movie I was showing, she looked at me, looked at her friends, and
said "Mr. Roman, you're looking at the best seven students of the class of
2012."

All seven graduated today. Four top 20 students, two class
officers, and one entrepreneur. Good work, guys. Damn good work.

A quick note - I know last month I named names and posted
pictures, but those were pictures of adults doing what adults do at a public
convention. While a fair number of the graduates are no longer minors, and the
fact that they're now graduates mean I can give them a lift to job and college
interviews, (laws and policies are funny things) between the minors in the
crowd and the fact that it was a students, staff, and family only event, I hope you're
all okay with the lack of names and pictures this month.

I'm a storyteller, a father, a husband, and a master of many trades. Of dubious quality in all of the above. The photo is not of me; it's art I bought at a convention, I subsequently commisioned the remaining pair of the trio. Lest it be misunderstood, the byline is from a long time friend who made the following comment: "Once in a while you've got to get into Bob's Head. After which you must get back out as fast as humanly possible." He stands by that assessment to this day. Then again, in answer to the question "which is more dangerous, an assault rifle or a hamster?", he answered "Depends, does Bob have the hamster?". Much later in life, a friend from college was doing impromptu Tarot readings, and before each one was choosing what card most accurately represented each person in the room. On being asked what card repped me, he replied "the six of spades". On seeing the inhabitants of the room go into thought trying to figure out what card that might equate to in the Tarot he said "No, don't convert it. In the great Tarot game of life, Bob is playing poker." I don't know WHY people say these things. They just do.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Every now and then it’s
good to go back to your roots, and I did with my Decadent Edge stories. For me,
my roots are with the short story. The first story I published in 2009 was less
than five thousand words, and this was only months after I declared I couldn’t
write less than a ninety thousand word novel.

A friend, knowing I
needed to change my evil ways, challenged me, saying I had to learn to tighten.
After reading my current manuscript, she’d declared it wordy, full of inactive and
unnecessary words that did nothing to move the story forward. And full of my
personality, which if you knew my friend, this wasn’t a compliment. You see, I
have all the attention span of a two-year old and my manuscripts ran all over
the place like a snot-nosed toddler, finding trouble wherever they could.

I will admit, she was
right and it took some hard lessons and nose to the grindstone efforts to whip
my stories into publishable shape. Now I’m proud to say, in almost every review
I’ve received, my quick pace and engaging characters are often mentioned. This
pace is the result of my friend’s challenge, one I’ll be eternally grateful
for.

The challenge went
something like this. Tell a story in seven-hundred words.

I can’t begin to tell you
how anxious that made me. How does anyone tell a story in that short of word
count? I dug my heels in and shook my head. No way could I do that.

Of course, being a good
critter and friend, she didn’t let me get away with it. What I discovered
during that little exercise in patience and frustration, is that writing a short
story isn’t any easier than writing a long one, actually, for me, it was
harder. Every single word had to have a purpose. I had no wiggle room. Hell, I
couldn’t describe my hero with so little words. Who could? So, determined to
prove how wrong she was, I penned a story about a cattle rustler and was amazed
when I managed to keep it fewer than seven hundred words. Actually, it ended
with five hundred.

After that, I began to
write shorts with a passion, challenging myself to make every word count. In
one story, about a spy, I’ve been told the hero is hot by several readers. Now,
I’m not going to lie, this bloats my ego a bit. When you go back and read the
story, nowhere in the five thousand words is an actual description of the hero.
Booyah! Nothing. Not one word of race, eye color, height, weight or hair color.
It is his personality that readers are seeing and I can’t begin to tell you how
much that thrills me.

Taking the techniques of
short stories into your novels will do several things. One, it will make it
extremely difficult to pen those one-hundred thousand word beasts you used to
write. You will struggle to hit sixty. You’ve trained yourself to cut the junk
and you will see this when you write your novels. It’s a habit that will stick
with you.

Two, you will find your
wordiness is under control. No, characters glancing back over their shoulders,
or licking their lovers with their tongues. (Don’t shake your head; you know
you’ve done it. If you haven’t, ever, I
bow before you.)

Three, action will become
limited to powerful, focused scenes. There will be less unnecessary movement,
speech tags and eye gazing. And in this process, your characters will become
three dimensional. Don’t worry so much about getting the description out in one
or two paragraphs. You will learn to let your characters reveal themselves.

One. You do not have the
word count to describe scenery. No strolling through fields of lavender holding
hands and contemplating the meaning of life. Sorry, unless that lavender plays
a pivotal role in your story, you just don’t have a place for it. This brings
me to my next point. Sometimes you don’t have enough word count to describe the
characters in detail. OMG, how do I let the reader know he’s totally hot? I
mean he’s got dark hair, blue eyes and washboard abs. They have to know. I
can’t leave that out. You can and in some cases, you will. And when you do,
those characters will have to be believable. The reader needs to be able to
relate to them on some level, or the other, or the story will not be engaging.
It is this challenge about the shorts I love so much. And the shorts that
belong to the Edge series are intense. They are snapshots, hot scenes that hit
hard and fast. They may not be epics, but they do tell a story, and they tell
it powerfully.

It took me a while to
figure this out, which brings me to number four. You will become a better
writer by putting into practice the skills you learned from penning short
stories.

So, all that being said,
I hope you check out my Carnality shorts in the Decadent Edge Series. I promise
there’s no strolling through fields of lavender, but you will get memorable
scenes and a sense of place and character.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

So this week I’ve decided to really clear out my spaces and do some major cleaning. It’s been a rewarding process so far. I feel lighter as if a burden has been lifted off my shoulders. It’s wonderful clearing out space, getting rid of the clutter and getting things clean and organized. As I go through this process, I feel as if my mind is getting a clean out too. Which is what we need sometimes. We need time to focus on something else, even if it is cleaning, to allow us a break from some of the stresses that we have going on in life. Cleaning may not be punching a bag or doing some exercise to relieve some of that tension that we carry with us on a daily basis but it allows us to take control of something, anything.

I’ve discovered that while cleaning my environment, I start to feel the stress slip away. I can focus on my writing once the clutter that surrounded me is gone. I don’t feel that press that I usually do when I’m writing. During speed writing, I feel a tension to perform. It can be rewarding, since I’m making progress on my story but at the same time if I don’t make a certain word count I feel disappointed. It’s a see saw, on the one hand I’m proud that I’ve forwarded my story but at the same time it’s not enough. I use to be able to write 5k in a day, 7 days a week. Now I’m lucky if I can get 500 words down.

And with deadlines it can be an even bigger sense of failure. Celebrating the small things can be great but not when you feel you’re letting yourself down. But with cleaning I feel that weight from my past disappointments and my emotional turmoil disappear. Even with the pain in my back and legs, at the end of the day I’ve decluttered my work area and other places that badly needed cleaning and taken back control. In doing this, I’ve also allowed myself to confront my own sense of accomplishment, but I’ve also cleaned a part of my mind, the creative part of me. Which was badly needed.

For a few hours, I’m in control. I’m free and I can do no wrong, or let down myself. It’s a wonderful sense of self. Hopefully this will translate into more wordage and a better sense of stability.

Monday, June 18, 2012

A few months ago, my daughter sat down to watch Inception. It was the second viewing for me (watching movies several times over is nothing new in our household) and I enjoyed it from the different aspect that I knew what was going on. I understood the very beginning of the movie when Cobb washed up on the beach. In the end, she loved it. She even wanted to watch it again so she could watch it from a different perspective.

Now that's movie love.

Because she loved Inception, I knew she would love The Matrix. Only problem there is the movie is R-rated. My kid is on the cusp of 15, she'll be a sophomore in the fall. I'm a firm believer R-rated movies are for more mature audiences. Nothing get my blood pumping more than sitting in a theater and seeing a parent bring their young children. Yeah, that actually happened. Hubs and I were waiting for Underworld: Rise of the Lycans to start and in walks this woman with two small children. Not babies. I'm talking 7 or 8 years old. There's some pretty gory stuff in that movie and it made me uncomfortable for them. But I digress.

The Matrix.

Fabulous movie. I still remember sitting in the theater opening weekend watching it, then walking out with my mind just blown to pieces. Given the fact my daughter is very much into computers and computer games, I knew she'd love it. But there was that pesky rating thing. So I broke out my disc one night and watched it with my husband. After it was over, I asked why it was R-rated again. I mean, sure there's foul language, but it's no worse than shit or goddamn. Words I'm pretty sure she hears on a daily basis at school. Hell, I know she's hear shit from me more than once because that's my swear word of choice. The f-bomb was nowhere to be seen. Okay, gun violence. I get that. No worse than a video game really, the blood was scarce in The Matrix. And I like to think I've raised a pretty level-headed kid. She knows the difference between reality and books/movies/video game violence.

So I thew caution to the wind and sat down to watch it with her. Afterward, I was glad I did. She loved it. It was a perfect movie for a geeky teenager who loves all the variations of sci-fi that are cropping up (The Matrix being cyberpunk). And I have to confess, I love sharing movies with her where there's a strong female lead character. Trinity in The Matrix is a wonderful example of just that.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

I realized after I posted last month (my first official post) that I didn't even introduce myself as a new member of this wonderful blog. So, I'm Lyric James! :-) I write multicultural (African American and Interracial) contemporary and sometimes pararnormal erotic romance. I'm so excited to be a part of this wonderful blog and I hope you stop by every day and visit the other wonderful authors of this blog. If you'd like to learn more about me and my books, visit my website at www.lyricjamesbooks.net

If you can't tell by my title today...I'm in "reader" mode this month. It's that time of year when I can actually sit down and get a lot of reading done that I don't get to do during the school year. And I do mean "sit" with a book in my hand...that's right...actual paper. I've just come to the realization that I still like the feel of a good book in my hand. Now, don't get me wrong, I'm for e-books all the way baby!!! During the school year, it's easier for me to just download a book and keep on pushing through my day. I'm not loaded down with an extra bag in my hand with four of five books in it. Plus, with kid activities and school activities, I don't often have the time to go to B&N and browse the shelves. But, just this month alone, I've purchased five books and checked out two from my local library, whereas, E-books, I've only purchased ONE. That's a big switch for me. Usually, it's the other way around.

So again, it got me to thinking, which do I really prefer. And I guess my answer is...I'm a 50/50 type of girl...depending on the time of the year and the circumstance. Oh...and let's not forget, I'm a listener of books too. I love to listen to books, especially when I'm in the car. I guess you can say, I'm a 50/50/50 girl. :-) Because actually, some series, I only buy in audio because I completely enjoy listening to the voices the narrator has created for the characters.

I'm the type of reader who spreads her love (money) around. What about you? Which do you prefer paper or .... E-book?

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Don't know if you've learned this about me yet, but I'm allergic to all manner of furry animal. We tried putting me with all the different types of hypoallergenic animals and to no avail. Whether coated with fur or hair, I still sneezed and wheezed and broke out in hives. No big deal, I just don't have animals as pets.

Here's my problem. I love werewolves. From the moment I read my first shifter story, and watched my first wolfman movie, I was hooked. First, I'm always cold. They are heat factories. We're a match made in heaven already! Then, they are passionate with all their emotions. I gotta tell ya, it's rather nice having a mate get all alpha on me, making me feel like a prized possession every now and then, and getting all rough and tumble when we make love. Not all the time, mind you. I'm very much an alpha female and need to be equal partners. Also, they are loyal and mate for life. Since I'm alpha, too, I don't like my man, or were, to stray. Yes, it's all about me. Finally, they are carnivorous. I LOVE a good steak, folks. Can't lie. Will never be a vegetarian unless forced to be so. Heat, emotion, loyalty. Can't beat that!

But how can I possibly conduct a relationship with a werewolf if I can't be in the same room with him? If his very existence makes me sick? Shaving right after shifting is silly because it will grow back. Now don't laugh, this is a serious problem! I'm reminded a bit of Nicole Hicks' book, "No Dogs Allowed". Haven't read it? You should.

So I've thought long and hard about it, and I'm not willing to do what doctors tell me- STAY AWAY FROM SHIFTERS. Nope, I just can't do it. So I've researched and researched and come to the conclusion that I need to find a shifter that doesn't have so much hair. Big cats, bears, wolves, horses, and most dogs are out of the question. BUT, there is one dog that has only the tiniest bit of hair on top of its head and a little on it's paws- the Chinese Crested. There's also a naked cat called a Sphynx. My options are looking up.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Never in a million years would I have thought that posting pics I find on the web THIS interesting.

But I do.

I rilly, rilly do.

For those poor souls who are scratching their heads asking what is this Pinterest thing? Pinterest is a website where you create an account to post pictures you like from the internet on boards, as in cork boards, so others can browse through them or for your own files.

I started with character ideas. Blam. Sucked in like a black hole. It's great for inspiration when I'm stuck. Some readers are curious how I imagine what the characters look like because, face it, cover art is limited. I started a new board last night I called 'Makes Me Smile' since sometimes I just need that.

I enjoy browsing other people's boards. It gives me insight on who they are. Just this morning I was looking through a fellow writers hero/heroine board and realized she likes men with strong chins and defined cheek bones with etheral like women. If you checked out mine, you'd see I like weird looking men and warrior like women. LOL

So careful before logging on Pinterest. There's a whole new world to explore and it may take you a few hours to find your way back out.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

HELP!

I can't believe it. Here I am, writing my second blog for Paranormal Romantics, still with a sick Mac. Granted it has been brought back to life two times since, and a third on the way. But it is sure becoming clear that it's not a software problem. It is also becoming alarmingly clear that I need a computer to access the internet; tablet/podger/mobile devices just don't cut it. As a writer, it is how I get my work done. As my own marketer, it is how I get word out about my books. As a blogger, well..you get the drift. I can't access writerly or reader-esk forums, nor can I paste and copy so well from a Kindle Fire. Whatever I do is amazingly basic. I can shout "hi" on Facebook or Twitter. I can access my books and music. And I can write...notes. And lucky for me, I can blog a 'little' -- texting was never my strength.
I guess you could say I'm on a forced holiday from writing. Yeah. Not likely. I'm plotting and planning, catching up with some reading, and studying a few how-to books -- figured I should make best use of this down time.

You'll also find I've caught up with all housework and I'm getting on with some abandoned DIY projects - photos on my facebook profile.

With a brand new release out (Strange and Beautiful) and another on the way (All The Pretty Faces), edits due for Irish Kisses two waiting in my in box, and two almost completed WIPs, I am distressed. I'm impatient. And I'm hanging on by a thread. I actually had no idea how important access to the internet from a reliable computer really was. But know that although I may not be interacting in the author yahoo loops or facebook pages and twitter hastags, I am super busy and miss you all! I miss hearing all your success stories or being there to offer supportive words. I miss hearing about new releases and opportunities.

So...if you have a minute, I sure would appreicate it if you shared your news and new releases below! Hit me with it! What's been going on in your authorly/reader world in the last few weeks? And pretty please...pass on any tips you've got for getting a writer through a computer free period.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Welcome to my second post as a member of Paranormal
Romantics. I’m really excited to be a regular contributor now, sole owner of
the 13th of every month LOL! I kind of jumped right in last month
without introducing myself, since my debut landed on Mother’s Day and I wanted
to share a paranormal experience my mother and I had.

So this month I’ll step back and do a bit of
introduction. I write paranormal romances
set in a fictionalized version of 1500 BC Egypt and I also write science
fiction adventure/romance. I’ve had one of each published so far – my debut
novella PRIESTESS OF THE NILE by Carina Press came out in January, then I self
published WRECK OF THE NEBULA DREAM in late March. On this blog I plan to focus more on my Tales
of the Nile (which is what I call my paranormal connected series) vs. the SFR.
So I’ll talk about topics relating to that, and writing in general. You can
always stop by my own blog http://veronicascott.wordpress.com/
for other subjects! Or find me on twitter daily at @vscotttheauthor.

I’ve always been deeply fascinated by Ancient Egypt – the
pharaohs, the mythology, the tombs, the jewelry. One of my alltime favorite YA
books was MARA, DAUGHTER OF THE NILE by Eloise Jarvis McGraw.

One day as an adult I stood by the side of King
Tutankhamen’s sarcophagus, gazing down into the eyes of the boy king, as
depicted in the amazing golden mask…my employer at the time was a major sponsor
of the King Tutankhamen traveling exhibit and I got to spend an hour virtually
alone in the museum. Things were much
less formal then and although obviously I wasn’t allowed to touch anything, not
with burly guards glaring at every turn, I could literally stand right next to
the items and look my fill, unimpeded by plexiglass.

The golden funerary objects were stunning but I was equally
fascinated by the everyday possessions and furniture in the exhibit, all created
with fanciful and amusing details. Everything I saw spoke to me eloquently of
the ancient Egyptian people who believed so fiercely in their gods and the
promised Afterlife. I had the feeling of stepping back in time for a moment.

I love writing about my characters against the backdrop of
life in Ancient Egypt, with the gods and goddesses taking an active role in
events. PRIESTESS OF THE NILE featured Sobek the Crocodile God and Isis, Queen
of the Gods. I currently have a manuscript out on submission entitled WARRIOR
OF THE NILE, where we see the goddess Nephthys and her sister Isis becoming
involved in the fate of my hero and heroine.
I’m editing my next novel, DANCER OF THE NILE, and there’s a lot of
involvement from Horus the Falcon god and Renenutet the Snake goddess. You
can’t ever go wrong with all the rich mythology of Egypt to rely upon!
Sometimes the challenge is deciding which of the many conflicting myths to
adopt.

But at the core of every story I write is a woman and the
man and their adventures and challenges along the way, while falling in love.
I’ll leave you this month with a short excerpt from an Egyptian love poem
written in the general time frame where I set my stories:

For heaven makes
your love
Like the advance of flames in straw,
And its longing like the downward swoop of a hawk.

Best Selling Science Fiction & Paranormal Romance author and “SciFi Encounters” columnist for the USA Today Happily Ever After blog, Veronica Scott grew up in a house with a library as its heart. Dad loved science fiction, Mom loved ancient history and Veronica thought there needed to be more romance in everything.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

June 16, Toria and Neal will be released by Secret Cravings Publishing - the first in my series The Cabin.

The Blurb....

Luther is a love witch who believes no one is beyond falling in love.Just sometimes they need a little help… in the form of The Cabin. A magical place where all barriers to stop love are removed.

The first in a series of short stories is the one of Toria and Neal, two people who have stopped believing in love. Their love life looks bleak until Luther invites them to his cabin.

Toria had a rough childhood. She is determined to work hard

and save her money so that she never has to be poor again. With all of her drive, she’s left no room for love in her life. Neal has terrible dreams and leftover PTSD from his time at war. His ex-wife has convinced him he is unlovable.

Luther believes in them and he believes they are meant to be together, which is why he strands them at his cabin. When the weekend is over, can love win the day?

As you can see from the excerpt they are going to need all the magic The Cabin has.

Smiling, she poured a little of the lavender-scented bubble bath oil into the hot tub and turned on the jets. Slipping into the warm water, she watched the flames dance in the fieldstone-framed fireplace that consumed most of the East wall. A large dark brown fur rug covered the floor between the hot tub and the bed that was nestled into an alcove. One of her life-long fantasies was to make love on a fur rug in front of a roaring fire with the snow blowing in the background.

She refilled her wine glass. “Not likely to happen this weekend.” Leaning back, she let the swirling warm water ease the knots from her lower back muscles.

“Are you part of the getaway?” a deep gravelly voice asked.

Toria shot up and spun around. “Who the hell are you? And what are you doing in my cabin?” She could have sworn she’d locked the door.

“Right now, I’m the guy enjoying the view.”

Realizing how exposed she was, Toria sank back under the bubbles. The man stood less than three feet away. A fitted black button down shirt hugged his arms and chest. Worn blue jeans clung to his hips and offered a wonderful view of his erection.

Toria jerked her eyes up to where they belonged and met a crooked smirk.

“Honey, while I can’t complain about what I’ve seen, female companionship isn’t something I’m looking for this weekend.”

“I’m not some hooker,” she screeched.

For a chance to win a copy of The Cabin ~ Toria and Neal, swag, and copies of my other 'hot' summer books join me at http://lynceeshillard.wordpress.com/ for the Hot Summer Nights blog hop June 20 - 24.

Monday, June 11, 2012

This post comes to you through the fog of a head cold, so I’ll
be briefer than normal. However, I want to bring up a topic that has been
weighing on my mind lately: where short stories fit into an author’s career.

I’m curious about the readers’ perspective, too. Do you
enjoy novellas or short stories that come out as part of a series of
full-length novels? What about short stories that aren’t part of a series but
are written by an author you’ve enjoyed?

The thing I’m most curious about is: what if you read a short
story and you don’t enjoy it? Will that spoil an author for you?

So far, I have only the debut novel of my first series
available on the market. However, several more books are contracted and written
or being written, including a novella for my series. However, being the energizer battery-type author that I am, I often write short stories for the
fun of it, and only think about possible publication value after the fact. Now,
I’m wondering what, if anything, to do with some of them. They aren't even all romance O_O though they are all paranormal/fantasy. It seems like a shame
to leave them forever in the darkness of my OTHER folder.

Personally, I love it when I go to a favorite author's website and find short stories to read. To be honest though, I don't take the time to read short stories of authors who are new to me--I'll read a novel from them first. I think that makes me weird! :) I'm on the fence as to whether or not they should be free, though. Yes, they're short, but they may still represent weeks of work.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Not Greek or Roman, though those have to be a close second, but the myths which always inspired me when I was growing up were the traditional stories and myths from the Anishinaabe (First Nations) people of Canada.

Probably, because it is part of my distance heritage.

One of my first memories of a child was being afraid of thunder storms (I love them now) and my father telling me about thunderbirds. Great massive birds who were protectors. He also led me to believe a thunderbird lived down in a massive storm sewer drain off Highway 2 in Whitby, Ontario ...but that's neither here nor there. ;-)

He also told me the Inuk people believe that the Aurora Borealis is the spirits of those who passed on coming close to earth where they could see them happy in the next life.

I've always been fascinated by the legends of the First Nations. It's affecting my writing too. My current WIP deals with a witch and a warrior, but I can't say too much more about that! ;-)

This summer I get to experience a heck of a lot more of this culture as I travel across country with my family.

Not only Canadian First Nations people, but American as well. We're going to be passing through Little Big Horn in Montana and many reservations. Out West I'll have a chance to explore more during the 100th Anniversary of the Calgary Stampede.

I'm excited and looking forward to more inspiration as I travel across the country.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Lately, I've experienced a few lessons courtesy of my life as a writer. Among these lessons:

I will edit my "casual" emails for passive voice

I will stare at edits and realize that every manuscript seems to be a love letter to a particular word and whichever word that is -- well I'll use it often

I will stare, eyes wide, when asked by a potential reader "Which of your books do you recommend that I read?"

In nearly every profession, you have a learning curve to deal with the tough challenges. Writing doesn't always prepare you for people and it prepares you even less for those hard questions. In fact, one of the most challenging and rewarding parts of writing is meeting new readers who are curious about me.

Granted, recommending one of my books shouldn't be tough. Notice, the word is "shouldn't," not isn't. I don't have a canned response because at last count, I have eight released titles in four series with six upcoming releases in the next four months.

This is all incredibly awesome news for me, but it makes pinpointing "what book of mine would I recommend a new reader start with" hard - particularly because I am writing in three different genres. Yes, I know, there are worse problems. I totally accept this and I even accept that this post is vaguely narcissistic and shallow, but I need help.

But I really do get stuck on that question, because it makes me want to ask:

Well what do you like to read? Do you have a particular genre? Do you like snarky heroines? Do you like hot guys? Do you like historicals? Westerns? Paranormal? Romantic suspense? Military guys?

See, if I get to know you, I can answer that question. But most of the time when this question comes up, there's a hard pressure to answer it and answer it right now. Which series do I choose? Which hero do I push?

And for the record, just picking my favorite won't work because they are all my favorites.

So what do I do? I'm going to start by asking you what you like to read and how you pick your favorite books (or even what they are). Readers and authors are both invited. Help a writer out. How do I answer which of my books a new reader should start with!

Heather Long lives in Texas with her family and their menagerie of animals. As a child, Heather skipped picture books and enjoyed the Harlequin romance novels by Penny Jordan and Nora Roberts that her grandmother read to her. Heather believes that laughter is as important to life as breathing and that the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy and Santa Claus are very real. In the meanwhile, she is hard at work on her next novel.

Friday, June 8, 2012

I went to see Battleship on its opening weekend because it had explosions, aliens, and Taylor Kitsch. He'd been great in John Carter, which I also enjoyed & feel was under-rated, so I was totally ready to enjoy Battleship on its own terms, which was a fun special effects movie. It delivered. No, we're not talking art film at its finest, but it had many of the elements I look for in an action flick.

Which is to say, lots of visuals, snappy dialog, and explosions. Sensing a theme here? I like explosions. But also, it had a somewhat credible romance with the lead girlfriend character being a strong woman, up to the challenge of fighting off aliens. She wasn't perfect, but she didn't make me grind my teeth.

Come to think of it, Kitsch's other summer movie, John Carter, had more than a passable romance. The romance was a key part of the story and the heroine was no slouch in the action department. Not just up to the challenge, but Princess Dejah Thoris is a strong willed leader, a woman ready to risk her life to not be railroaded, who risks everything for her people, who can FIGHT! Dare I hope this is an up and coming trend in action adventure movies, that the heroines be more than a pinup doll?

The worst pinup doll character in a movie of this type has to be the girlfriend in Transformers 3. Talk about teeth grinding. I wanted to bash her over the head. Several times over. The world is crashing down around her. Her boyfriend is greasy, bleeding, mussed, torn, dirty. Her crisp white suit is spotless, her lipstick gleaming--even after the obligatory kiss, and she's showing enough skin you can't imagine she doesn't have a road burn here or there from all that skidding around on pavement. But no. She's spotless and coiffed. The heroines in Battleship and John Carter get in on the action. They look like they've run around some. Maybe not as much as Ripley in Alien, but yeah, their hair isn't coiffed at the end of the action scenes.

So, if you want to watch an action adventure romance with a strong female lead, catch John Carter. Don't watch Transformers 3.

How about you? Watch a recent action adventure with an at least passably competent female lead?

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Monday – You’re dealing with kids who don’t
want to wake up for school. Maybe you spent the weekend cleaning your house,
but soon you realize it’s now a mess again. Your day is spent cleaning the
house you already cleaned, getting the kids off to school, and somehow dragging
yourself out of the Monday blues.

Tuesday – You’re still dealing with kids
who don’t want to go to school. Now you also have to deal with the laundry that
seems to have appeared out of nowhere. Didn’t you just do it on the weekend?
And why is your house still messy?!

Wednesday – Okay, the kids are more agreeable
and getting off to school is a bit easier. You’re folding laundry from the day
before, and also trying to pick a meal that your kids won’t scowl at and will
actually eat. And now you’re in the middle of the week still cleaning up the
house that appears to never stay clean. Not only that, but damn do you really
have to clean the kitty litter? This is so NOT sexy!

Thursday – Oh excitement, the weekend is almost
here! Your kids now start counting down the days until they’re off—repeatedly.
And all you keep thinking about is the cleaning that’s soon upon you. You are keeping
track of what’s going with school, doing homework, taking care of your pets,
making sure your kids eat healthy lunches—oh right, you have to go grocery
shopping. And when was the last time you put makeup on? Going to the grocery
store in basically your pajamas is acceptable, right?

Friday—The weekend has arrived.
You exhale a deep breath of relief because soon you can erase half of your
duties because there’s no school, no homework, no grumbling kids that fight you
about everything, and you can sleep in. But you realize for a
week you have been wearing jogging pants and your hair has been in a ponytail. Your
showers have lasted a total of five minutes and wait…have you even thought of
yourself all week? And let's not even add into the picture if you've had sick kids to deal with, which if you have, you'd be not only lacking sleep but probably now have been covered in germs.

Then enters
your well-rested hubby on a Saturday morning that has been waggling his
eyebrows at you all week. While normally a romantic night would be right up
your alley, this week has exhausted you. You’ve been glaring at him every time
he looks at you because you’ve been pulled in a thousand directions and you
want a moment to yourself! If he dared to put a hand on you at all through the week, you would have cut it off!

But a
romantic night would be nice and you may feel a bit bad for glaring at him while he's tried very hard to romance you...

That is, if
you can get past the pile of laundry, kids, responsibilities, thoughts of the next
week ahead and the thousand things you have to do.

So, how do you fix this?

Read
one helluva naughty story. A book that won’t take you a week to read, but
simply a couple hours. You take that book into a hot bath with bubbles, give
yourself a much needed glass of wine—all of which you deserve. And you shut the
world out! It’s the perfect way for moms—me included—to let go of our busy
lives that can be totally unsexy, and allow our minds to simmer in an erotic
tale.

Take it
from my experience, your hubby will ensure he gives you that time alone…often…since the woman that comes out of that bath is the sexy-kitten he fell in love with, not the one in jogging pants! It
really is a win-win!! :)

The Pact of Seduction has
one rule—fulfill your ultimate fantasy. Bella’s problem, she can’t live up to her
vow. But her failure spins events that lead her into unknown territory. Kole, a
Dom at the sex club Castle Dolce Vita, wasn’t part of her fantasy, but he’s
about to show her he should have been.

Kole is more than willing
to introduce Bella to BDSM since he’s held an interest in her for some time.
But the feisty woman isn’t easily tamed and her strong personality proves to be
difficult. While she might be determined to keep him at a distance, Kole has
other ideas. He won’t allow her to shut him out.

A pact between best friends
brought them together, emotional barriers tear them apart. Kole skillfully
reminds Bella through pleasure and punishment that she is now his submissive,
and her place is under his command.

Publisher’s Note: This
book contains explicit sexual situations, graphic language, and material that
some readers may find objectionable: BDSM theme and elements, including
spanking.

Stacey Kennedy’s erotic romance
novels are just that…erotic. There is nothing better than taking
the dominant men she loves and watching them do wicked things to their women.
But she just can’t write without a little humor added into the mix so that’s
always a must have in her stories. And of course what’s a story without a big
dose of emotional characters, too. Her urban fantasy/paranormal and erotic
romance series have hit Amazon Kindle and All Romance eBooks bestseller lists.

Stacey welcomes comments from readers. You can find her at
www.staceykennedy.com.

The journey as a writer all began when I was a teen and wrote poetry, which still to this day I pull out to have a good laugh. Later on, I tried a couple of times to put a book together with no such luck. Couldn’t ever get past the first few chapters. But once I was exposed to the paranormal world, ideas came quickly.
At first, it was a way to keep my brain alive since being a stay at home mom can be a little let’s say―numbing. It was an escape from screaming kids, dirty diapers and plain old mom duty. It started as a hobby, but as the stories progressed it became a passion. Now, I indulge at nap time, especially the juicy bits! Every mom needs a good thrill!
So here in Kitchener, Ontario, I am a thirty one year old wife, mom, house cleaner, cook, teacher, play-doh extraordinaire, swing pusher, toddler chaser after – who loves the outdoors, curling up with the latest flick, and if I’m not plugging away at a new novel, I’ve got my nose buried deep in a good book. So there it is―my life!